This feature is provided through the Clipboard plugin that is included in all CKEditor presets available from the Download site.

One of the most important CKEditor features is the integration with the operating system’s clipboard. The main role of this feature is to intercept any content that is being pasted, dropped, cut, copied or dragged from or to the editor. This allows to apply certain rules to this content, for instance with Advanced Content Filter.

This feature is provided by the Clipboard plugin and, because of incomplete, broken or totally missing native support for this type of operations across browsers, it is very complex. The aim of this article is to explain how CKEditor integration with clipboard works under the hood. We recommend reading the Drop and Paste Feature Overview article first.

The main problem is that the developers want to have control over what can be pasted or dropped into the editor. Browser implementations of these mechanisms are highly inconsistent and in many cases are unacceptable (e.g. WebKit and Blink based browsers put a very messy HTML soup into the clipboard). Furthermore, a user can copy content from various sources like other websites, email clients, word processors, etc. This content is full of inline styles, unwanted styling elements or simply is not semantic and therefore it could break the editing experience in CKEditor (read more in the Content Filtering guide).

Therefore, filters must be implemented. But in order to do so, the content must be intercepted before it is inserted into the editor.

But this is only one of many reasons why having control over the clipboard is useful. It also allows to implement features like uploading pasted files, customized integration that widgets have and finally, allows what we love most, to have a highly unified behavior across all browsers.

The contentEditable attribute has no official specification yet, and features like what sort of content is put into the clipboard when the user copies some selected text will not be specified in the near future. Therefore, browsers vary when it comes to algorithms such as “get selected HTML” or “insert HTML into the selection” that yield different, often very poor, results.

The paste event is the entry point for all pasted and, since CKEditor 4.5, also dropped content. This means that this event is fired every time some content is dropped or pasted. It does not matter if it was copied or dragged from another application, website, another editor or within a single editor. The paste event is fired and, unless canceled, the data that it contains will be inserted into the editor.

For example, if you want to replace all old British swears like “Zooterkins” and “Gadzooks” with stars in the pasted content, you could do it this way:

editor.on( 'paste', function( evt ) {
evt.data.dataValue = evt.data.dataValue
.replace( /zooterkins/gi, 'z********s' )
.replace( /gadzooks/gi, 'g******s' );
// This code obviously will not preserve the case of the first and last letters.
// Let it be an exercise for the reader ;).
} );

Note that dataValue is a JavaScript string with HTML which means that it may need to be parsed to achieve more complex changes and stringified back later.

The evt.data.dataValue is the most important property as this is the HTML which will be passed to the method-insertHtml method in the last paste listener.

But the paste event contains more useful properties like evt.data.method ('drop' or 'paste') or evt.data.type ('auto', 'html' or 'text'). Refer to the paste documentation to learn about all available properties.

Note that in both cases pasted dataValue is an HTML string. If a plain text is pasted and the type is set to 'text', dataValue contains an “HTMLified” version of that plain text. It means that line breaks are replaced with <br>, double line breaks create separate paragraphs, etc.

In many cases everything that the editor gets from the clipboard is an HTML string (see the Paste Bin section below), so CKEditor is not able to guess the type of the pasted content. For instance, when dataValue equals 'foo', then was it possibly copied from a website or from a text editor? At the time of writing this article it is only possible to recognize the real content type in Chrome, Firefox and Opera, so in other browsers the type depends on clipboard_defaultContentType (hence, most of the time it is 'html' regardless of what was pasted).

This recognition is also done in the paste event listener, with a priority of 6, so listeners with higher priorities may see the type == 'auto' which means that the type is not yet recognized.

Another useful property of the paste event is the evt.data.dataTransfer property which is an instance of the dataTransfer class. It was introduced in CKEditor 4.5 when CKEditor started using the Clipboard API whenever it is possible. Thanks to this you have access to:

Data of various types, like text/html, text/plain, application/json or application/rtf.

Limited browser capabilities related to clipboard support required implementing a rich facade for this feature which partially works as a polyfill. It allows to achieve results which would otherwise not be possible. For instance, it is possible to set and get various data types (while all versions of Internet Explorer support only Text and URL) and to know the source of the data that was dropped.

By default CKEditor handles only text/html and text/plain data types. If Clipboard APIs are available, in a paste event listener with a priority of 1 the editor checks if the text/html data is available in the DataTransfer object and if so, copies it to dataValue and sets the type to be 'html'. If it is unavailable, the editor checks text/plain and does the same after “HTMLifying” it. If both types are empty, it means that DataTransfer contains files or data in some other format. If the dataValue property is not set in any listener, method-insertHtml will not be called.

If you want to add support for some data format, use the paste event listener. For example, if you want to handle Rich Text Format and you created the rtfToHtml() converter, you can do the following:

DataTransfer has also a method to check what the transfer type was: if the data comes from the same editor, another editor or external source. This recognition works perfectly fine for dragging and dropping, but not for copying and pasting. Because of browser limitations, we are not able to recognize the source in every case, so we assume that it is external in cases we are not sure.

CKEditor wants to intercept pasted data in every browser. Unfortunately, the Clipboard API is not yet available in all browsers, so CKEditor uses a hybrid solution to get the data using the Clipboard API and a paste bin.

It would be perfect if getting data from clipboard when the Clipboard API was available was as simple as accessing the clipboardData from the native paste event and using a backup solution if Clipboard API is not available. Unfortunately, at the moment of writing this article, we know about cases in most browsers where the data is pasted when allowing the browser to perform a native paste, but is not available through the browser Clipboard API.

If the data is available through the Clipboard API, CKEditor fires the paste event with the data available in the dataTransfer and an empty dataValue. If it is not possible, CKEditor uses the paste bin.

A paste bin is a CKEditor mechanism to capture native paste. The mechanism works in the following steps:

When an attempt to paste the data is discovered, a moment before the paste really happens, CKEditor moves the selection to a special hidden container called the paste bin.

Next, CKEditor waits to let the browser do the native paste into that paste bin.

After a short timeout CKEditor gets the content of this container.

Then, CKEditor moves the selection back to the editable and removes the paste bin.

Finally, CKEditor fires the paste event with captured data as the dataValue.

It is very tricky to prevent the browser from blinking and scrolling. Up to version 4.5 this was the main mechanism for pasting and many bugs were reported and needed our patches. Now this is a backup solution when the Clipboard API is not supported properly. It is used in Internet Explorer, Edge and Chrome for Android.

Since version 4.5 CKEditor has a custom cut and copy handling mechanism, which means that it copies or cuts selected HTML using the getSelectedHtml and extractSelectedHtml methods and puts that data into the dataTransfer object as text/html. By using these methods instead of letting the browser handle copy and cut natively, CKEditor is able to handle these operations in the same way in all browsers, and to focus on what the user expected.

To avoid the security alerts in Internet Explorer when the user copies or cuts content using keyboard shortcuts, the editor does not use custom methods and lets the browser get or extract selected data.

Since version 4.5 CKEditor handles dragging and dropping manually. CKEditor uses the native browser drag and drop mechanism and listens for dragstart, dragend, dragover and drop events on the editable area and fires the editor’s events:

Listeners for these events perform the entire drag and drop operation, which means that CKEditor puts dragged content into the DataTransfer object (if dragstart is inside it), gets dragged content, finds a range at the drop position and fires the paste event. Note that these events do not need to be based on native events. For example, the drag and drop of the block widgets uses Line Utilities and listens for mouse events, but fires the dragstart, dragend and drop events so the drag and drop is handled by the same code and hence can be processed in the same way.

Note that the drop event fires the paste event which is the one which should be used for data transformations such as filtering or uploading files.

An interesting example of this feature is how drag and drop of widgets is implemented:

// When an item in the contact list is dragged, copy its data into drag and drop data transfer.// This data is later read by the editor#paste listener in the hcard plugin defined above.
CKEDITOR.document.getById( 'contactList' ).on( 'dragstart', function( evt ) {
// The target may be some element inside the draggable div (e.g. the image), so get the div.h-card.var target = evt.data.getTarget().getAscendant( 'div', true );
// Initialization of CKEditor data transfer facade is a necessary step to extend and unify native// browser capabilities. For instance, Internet Explorer does not support any other data type than 'text' and 'URL'.// Note: evt is an instance of CKEDITOR.dom.event, not a native event.
CKEDITOR.plugins.clipboard.initDragDataTransfer( evt );
var dataTransfer = evt.data.dataTransfer;
// Pass an object with contact details. Based on it, the editor#paste listener in the hcard plugin// will create HTML to be inserted into the editor. We could set text/html here as well, but:// * It is a more elegant and logical solution that this logic is kept in the hcard plugin.// * We do not know now where the content will be dropped and the HTML to be inserted// might vary depending on the drop target.
dataTransfer.setData( 'contact', CONTACTS[ target.data( 'contact' ) ] );
// We need to set some normal data types to backup values for two reasons:// * In some browsers this is necessary to enable drag and drop into text in editor.// * The content may be dropped in another place than the editor.
dataTransfer.setData( 'text/html', target.getText() );
// You can still access and use the native dataTransfer - e.g. to set the drag image.// Note: IEs do not support this method... :(.if ( dataTransfer.$.setDragImage ) {
dataTransfer.$.setDragImage( target.findOne( 'img' ).$, 0, 0 );
}
} );
// ...// Handle dropping a contact by transforming the contact object into HTML.// Note: All pasted and dropped content is handled in one event - editor#paste.
editor.on( 'paste', function( evt ) {
var contact = evt.data.dataTransfer.getData( 'contact' );
if ( !contact ) {
return;
}
evt.data.dataValue =
'<span class="h-card">' +
'<a href="mailto:' + contact.email + '" class="p-name u-email">' + contact.name + '</a>' +
' ' +
'<span class="p-tel">(' + contact.tel + ')</span>' +
'</span>';
} );